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Postmarketing Surveillance Conference

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Title: Postmarketing Surveillance Conference


1
Vaccine Safety Surveillance A Case Study
  • Postmarketing Surveillance Conference
  • April 11, 2007

2
Overview
  • Complexities of Vaccine Development
  • Overview of Current Surveillance System
  • Menactra Case Study
  • Enhancing the System
  • Conclusions and Recommendations

Menactra Meningococcal (Groups A, C, Y and
W-135) Polysaccharide Diphtheria Toxoid Conjugate
Vaccine
3
Vaccine Development and Safety Commitment to
Public Health
  • Vaccines work best when most members of a
    community are vaccinated
  • Vaccines must be safe for use by as many people
    as possible
  • Typically given to healthy people
  • Vaccines have been shown to be remarkably safe
    and effective in preventing serious infectious
    diseases and have saved countless lives
  • Years of testing are required by law before a
    vaccine is licensed and distributed in the US
  • Once in use, vaccines are continually monitored
    for safety and efficacy

As a result, the United States currently has the
safest, most effective vaccine supply in history.
www.cdc.gov/od/science/iso/research_activities/vae
rs
Source www.cdc.gov
4
Development of New Vaccines - Current Environment
  • In the past 3 decades, more than 2/3 of all new
    vaccines approved worldwide have been developed
    in the US
  • 18 new vaccines were approved between 1980 and
    1996, resulting in substantial public health
    benefits
  • New vaccine development requires larger pre- and
    post-licensure studies
  • Development costs for a new vaccine increased, on
    average, from 231M in 1991 to 802M by 2001
  • Escalation of development costs has consequences
    vaccines with small markets are not developed
  • Practical limits on the sample size of
    pre-licensure studies
  • Pre-licensure trials can never be large enough to
    rule out all rare adverse events
  • Accordingly, robust postmarketing surveillance
    (signal detection, hypothesis testing) is
    essential

Source Warren KS. New Scientific Opportunities
and old obstacles in vaccine development,
1986Plotkin, Orenstein. Vaccines, 2004
5

Post-Marketing Surveillance
  • As with any medical procedure, vaccination has
    some risks, as well as proven benefits
  • Social benefits of vaccination increase with
    increasing coverage
  • Social compact in return for accepting small
    risk, 2 promises
  • Continuous monitoring of vaccine safety
  • Fair compensation
  • An effective post-marketing surveillance system
    provides assurances that rare adverse events can
    be detected and assessed
  • Inactivated measles vaccine, rotavirus vaccine,
    conjugate meningococcal vaccine
  • A transparent system can also be used to answer
    questions / concerns of interest to public health
    and the public at large

Effective and transparent surveillance systems
are the pillars for effectively monitoring
immunization safety and maintaining public
confidence
Source Plotkin, Orenstein. Vaccines,
2004www.cdc.gov
6
Current US surveillance system has played a key
role in monitoring immunization safety... But
how can we make a good system better?
1st Component (Signal / Hypothesis Generation)
VAERS
Limitations
Strengths
  • Incomplete reporting
  • Multiple vaccines and other events create
    additional challenges to establish causality
  • Data limitations
  • Passive reporting
  • Undefined denominator
  • National in scope
  • Able to detect very rare events and previously
    unrecognized events
  • Triggers further investigations
  • Can detect unusual clusters of adverse events

7
Vaccine Safety Datalink Shared MCO databases
linking vaccination records with health outcomes
2nd Component (Hypothesis Testing)
Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD)
Limitations
Strengths
  • Delays in data availability
  • It could take up to 18 months to generate a
    cleaned-up data tape compiling information from
    multiple sources
  • Lacks complete geographical coverage
  • Database currently not large enough to test
    hypotheses for very rare events
  • Rigorous safety data
  • Relatively time efficient
  • Once all the data are collected, analysis can be
    done quickly
  • Sample size is big enough to test hypotheses for
    uncommon adverse events

8
Menactra Case Study
Menactra Case Study
  • VAERS reports of GBS following the administration
    of Menactra vaccine prompted a comprehensive
    review and data collection effort by FDA, CDC,
    and sanofi pasteur
  • Frequent communication and information sharing
    among these organizations resulted in rapid
    assessment and public reporting of these events
  • Public/private partnerships are key to meet
    vaccine safety surveillance goals and reassure
    the public that the system works
  • This case study also identified areas where the
    safety surveillance system could be enhanced

9
A Comprehensive Effort
Menactra Case Study
  • CDC, FDA and sanofi pasteur held weekly meetings
    to share data, discuss case findings, review
    Menactra distribution data, and coordinate
    investigations
  • CDC utilized numerous resources and partners to
    collect data
  • Safety Branch and VSD partners
  • CISA centers
  • State surveillance
  • The Brighton Collaboration
  • Sanofi pasteur clinical, regulatory, and medical
    affairs teams worked closely with FDA to provide
    updated labeling and rapid communications to
    healthcare professionals
  • Comprehensive communications designed to prompt
    immediate reporting of potential cases

10
Menactra Case Study
Active Surveillance for GBS cases
  • CDC led the States team responsible for active
    identification of GBS cases
  • Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists
    (CSTE) participated in active GBS surveillance
  • State epidemiologists and Emerging Infectious
    Disease specialists in 7 states (New Jersey, New
    York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, California, Illinois,
    Texas), as well as other states where GBS is a
    reportable disease, participated in active GBS
    case surveillance and identification
  • American Society of Plasmapheresis (50-60 of GBS
    cases receive Plasmapheresis) participated in
    case detection efforts
  • Working with AHIP, CDC, FDA, Sanofi pasteur led
    efforts to expand the population under active
    surveillance (VSD-like)

11
What has sanofi pasteur, along with CDC and FDA,
done to ensure HCPs were informed and proactively
looking for GBS cases
Menactra Case Study
Label changes in Menactra US Package Insert and
Companys Core Data Sheet
Scientific Information (MMWR Fact Sheet
Revised VIS)
FDA / CDC / sanofi pasteur Coordination of Press
Releases
Dear Health Care Professional Letter
GBS Surveillance Form
Sept 05
Dec 05
Stakeholders Involved
FDA, CDC, Medical Affairs, Regulatory Affairs
CDC
FDA / CDC
FDA, Pharmacovigilance, Medical and Regulatory
Affairs
Medical and Regulatory Affairs
12
Effective Public/Private Partnership
Menactra Case Study
Action Plan
Cooperation
  • GBS surveillance form
  • Active surveillance
  • Label changes
  • Data sharing (VAERS, CISA,

Communication
  • Active Media Statement
  • Updated MMWR and Fact Sheet
  • Updated VIS
  • HCP letters

Coordination
  • Weekly conference calls
  • Coordinated press releases, statements
  • Coordination regarding ongoing and planned
    investigations

13
Menactra Case Study
GBS Reports in Menactra vaccine recipientsACIP
Meeting of February 21-22, 2007
  • Update through the end of January 2007
  • Total of 19 cases of GBS after Menactra vaccine
    with onset interval of 2-33 days
  • 17 cases were in the 11-19 years old age group
  • VSD Rapid Cycle Analysis project
  • 156,542 doses administered
  • Zero cases observed among vaccine recipients
    11-19 years old within 6 weeks of vaccination
  • Projection 0-1 cases were expected
  • Does the number of reported GBS cases exceed the
    expected rate?
  • Observed compared to expected rate calculations
  • Confounders/uncertainties age, season,
    background rates

14
Menactra Case Study
GBS Reports in Menactra vaccine recipientsACIP
MEETING (February 21-22)
ACIP meeting
MMWR update communication on October 20, 2006
(data through the end of September 2006)
versus 1.73 (95 CI 1.04-2.88)
versus 1.72 (95 CI 0.83-3.55)
  • Calculation using sale data through end of
    November 2006 - 6.93 million doses distributed to
    11-19 y/o.

Source www.cdc.gov
15
Menactra Case Study
GBS Reports in Menactra vaccine recipients with
Age Stratification ACIP MEETING (February 21-22)
Source www.cdc.gov
16
Enhancing the surveillance system will provide
additional data
Menactra Case Study
Source www.cdc.gov
17
Enhanced surveillance needed to further assess
potential relationship between Menactra and GBS
  • Complications
  • Rare outcome (if associated, attributable risk is
    on the order of 1 per million)
  • Uncertainty regarding background rates
  • Confounding with age and seasonality
  • Expanded cohort surveillance needed
  • VSD, even in current expanded form, too small
  • The potential exists to establish a much-expanded
    VSD-like capability
  • There are lt 10 very large MCOs
  • Taken together, they could contribute 100-150 M
    covered lives
  • No economic incentive for MCOs to participate
  • MCO participation would rest on public health
    importance, assurance of non-intrusiveness

18
Menactra Case Study
The need for additional data on GBS rates
triggered the creation of a Health Plan Consortium
  • Purpose
  • To create an expanded, rapid and sensitive,
    active post-marketing safety surveillance system
    to inform public health and regulatory
    decision-makers
  • Consortium Concept
  • An activity of the Centers for Evaluation and
    Research on Therapeutics (CERTs) - a national
    program with a congressional mandate administered
    by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
    (AHRQ) and FDA
  • Dr. Richard Platt leads the Harvard CERT
  • AHIP is a key partner in organizing and
    administering consortium
  • Health plans are members and contribute with data
  • Advisory Committee with diverse stakeholders,
    including industry
  • Funding from a variety of sources

The Health Plan Consortium could only be
developed through a multi-party public-private
collaborative effort
19
Menactra Case Study
Health Plan Consortium - Managed Care
Organizations (MCO) database study
  • The currently active study is a multi-site
    retrospective cohort study of the relationship
    between immunization with tetravalent
    meningococcal conjugate vaccine (MCV4) and
    Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) in adolescents over
    the 42-month period of March 1, 2005 to August
    31, 2008.
  • Data currently being collected
  • Funded by sanofi pasteur
  • The study will use a cohort assembled from health
    plan members enrolled at selected health plans
    throughout the United States.
  • Initial effort encompasses data from 4 major US
    health plans
  • Total of 40 million covered lives

20
Menactra Case Study
Health Plan Consortium - Managed Care
Organizations (MCO) database study
  • The consortium plan is to add other health plans
    incrementally, reaching approximately 100 million
    covered lives
  • Cases will be identified using administrative
    data, and case validation and collection of
    information on risk factors and other covariates
    will be performed by medical record review.
  • Quarterly data extracts and cumulative analyses
  • First quarterly report Q3 or Q4 2007
  • A Cox proportional hazards model will be used,
    with age and days since vaccination as
    time-dependent covariates.

21
This effort exemplifies sanofi pasteur's and
industrys commitment to public health and to
maintaining public confidence in vaccines
  • Strong orientation to public health
  • Unique responsibility
  • Immunizations are strongly recommended, widely
    used, and targeted towards healthy individuals
  • Accordingly, lower risk tolerance
  • Transparency
  • Direct communication and cooperation
  • Long-term public health commitment

22
Moving forward
Conclusions and Recommendations
  • Vaccination is one of the greatest public health
    achievements over the last century
  • Incidence of many vaccine-preventable diseases
    has been reduced by more than 97 in the US
    compared with pre-immunization era
  • Pre-licensure studies for new vaccines cannot be
    made large enough to rule out important but rare
    AEs
  • Diminishing returns
  • Public health consequences
  • Therefore, robust postmarketing surveillance is
    mandatory
  • Postmarketing commitment trials (manufacturer)
  • Population surveillance (public or
    public-private partnership)

Source CDC MMWR 46(12), April 1999
CDC MMWR 47(53), Dec 1999
Plotkin, Orenstein. Vaccines, 2004
23
Moving forward
Conclusions and Recommendations
  • Existing US vaccine safety surveillance system
    has proved effective but can be enhanced
  • Improved vaccination databases (registries)
  • Enlarged populations under surveillance for
    outcomes
  • Improved coordination between manufacturer, FDA,
    CDC, other public health agencies
  • All patients' vaccinations and health
    experiences are immediately and continuously
    accessible in automated databases allowing
    optimal detection and analysis of potential
    problems in vaccine safety (and effectiveness).
    - Jesse Goodman, 4/10/07

Source CDC MMWR 46(12), April 1999
CDC MMWR 47(53), Dec 1999
Plotkin, Orenstein. Vaccines, 2004
24
Moving forward
Conclusions and Recommendations
  • Public/private cooperation is key to meet new
    goals and challenges in vaccine safety
    surveillance.
  • Advances in postmarketing surveillance will
    require national-scale resources
  • Vaccine registries very-large-population
    outcome databases
  • Further extend public/private partnerships to
    secure appropriate funding to institutionalize
    additional data collection and evaluation
    capabilities
  • The Health Plan Consortium, which was put
    together to address a specific acute need, can
    play an important role in a longer-term solution
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